“…Studies have also focused on high cognitive behaviours, including learning and memory (Dodd, Rothwell, & Lukowiak, 2018;Sunada et al, 2017;Swinton et al, 2019;Tan & Lukowiak, 2018), as well as deciphering cellular mechanisms of synapse formation and synaptic plasticity during development (Getz, Wijdenes, Riaz, & Syed, 2018;Mersman, Jolly, Lin, & Xu, 2020;Onizuka et al, 2012). L. stagnalis has also recently gained increasing popularity for the investigation of brain aging and neurodegenerative diseases such as Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease (Arundell et al, 2006;de Weerd, Hermann, & Wildering, 2017;Ford, Crossley, Vadukul, Kemenes, & Serpell, 2017;Hermann, Perry, Hamad, & Wildering, 2020;Maasz et al, 2017). It is important to note that comparative studies have highlighted several human homologs involved in aging and neurodegenerative disease in both A. californica and L. stagnalis (Fodor, Urban, Kemenes, Koene, & Pirger, 2020;Moroz et al, 2006;Moroz & Kohn, 2010), showing the great potential for future molecular insights into brain aging and pathology using these unique mollusc models.…”